English Source
So where is the power for living a life of fulfillment? How do we gain restoration to the communion mankind once had with God? Let's look at what **Romans 1:16–17** says:
day3.morning.p1"For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek. For in it the righteousness of God is revealed from faith to faith, as it is written: 'But the righteous one will live by faith.'"day3.morning.p2.epigraph
Paul tells us in this verse that he is not ashamed of the gospel because the good news of Christ is so powerful to redeem what we lost. The power to access life that we have been seeking in our own understanding is found only in laying down everything to be with God. God's redemption of mankind and your personal salvation go so much further than just a one-time event that saves your soul from hell. As incredibly powerful as that is, God's redemption covers all of your life from beginning to end. His redemptive power is enough to free you in every way, here and now, and to free you from the past as well.
day3.subsection.p1The act of saving or being saved from sin, error, or evil; the act of regaining or gaining possession of something in exchange for payment; or clearing a debt.
day3.subsection.p2Redemption is our ransom being paid in full; the total riddance, deliverance, and freedom from the bondage we were doomed to live. Christ recovered ownership of us through the state of sin and consequences of sin. He legally paid for our debt and purchased us back from our state of sin and consequences of sin. Any area of our life He has access through (through God's empowerment) accuser can be reclaimed.
day3.subsection.p3Salvation means a daily fullness of provision, power, healing, deliverance, and rich companionship with the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. You've entered into a covenant relationship with God Himself. All that God is, is promised to us in salvation.
day3.subsection.p4Before Paul's conversion, he had the truth. He was a well-respected leader among the Jews. Paul is a guy who had everything going for him in the natural world (**Phil 3:5–6**). Then, on the road to Damascus, he had an encounter with Jesus Christ. He knew he'd just been delivered from what he thought was life, but it had no power. It didn't bring the knowing of God's love, which was life-changing. For Paul to say he is not ashamed of the gospel and that it is the good news that delivered him shows just how life-changing salvation was for him. He's not ashamed to have no power in himself to bring life or good which was contrary to his former way of living when he tried to fulfill the law. He admitted that only Christ has power to redeem and restore.
day3.subsection.p5Talk to God about reclaiming something that has been lost in your life.
day3.invitation.p1(form / journal lines — same five-question pattern as Day 1 and Day 2)
day3.evening.p1- Recurring book elements:** QR code on each morning page (audio version), Bible verse epigraph, prose reflection, "Invitation for the Day" closing, evening 5-question reflection with journal lines.
- Likely concept-dictionary candidates** (theology terms requiring consistent rendering across all 63 days):
- exchange* (the central metaphor — also book title)
- fullness* / *fulfillment*
- yield / yielded / yielding*
- abide* (likely appears later)
- communion*
- co-labor*
- speculation* (Pauline sense, not modern)
- futility / futile*
- worship* (book defines it specifically: "devote yourself to that which has your attention and affection")
- redemption*
- covenant*
- Pronouns for God/Spirit (capitalization conventions, "He/Him")
- Bible book/chapter/verse formatting
- Translation register:** evangelical Christian devotional, conversational warmth, second-person address ("you were created…"), occasional emphasis via italics and pull-quotes.
Translation (SV)
Loading…